U.S. Route 5 is a north-south
United States highway running
through the New
England
states of Connecticut
, Massachusetts
, and Vermont
.
Significant cities along the route include
New Haven,
Connecticut
; Hartford, Connecticut
; and Springfield, Massachusetts
. From Hartford northward to St. Johnsbury,
Vermont
, the road closely follows the route of the Connecticut River.
The entire route of US 5 is closely paralleled by
Interstate 91. US 5 now serves as the local
business route for the Interstate highway.
The northern terminus
of US 5 is in Derby Line,
Vermont
at the Canadian
border, where it continues into Quebec
as Quebec Route 143, which was Route 5 until
renumbered in the mid 1970s. Its southern terminus is in New Haven,
Connecticut
at an intersection with Interstate 91.
Route description
US 5 enters three states, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont,
with the latter containing over half of US 5's total distance.
Throughout nearly all of U.S. 5's entire length, it remains its own
road entirely separate from Interstate 91, which has largely
replaced it as a through route (and now carries most of the
traffic). It is only co-signed onto I-91 for less than half of a
mile in Springfield, MA, before splitting off alone again.
Connecticut
US 5
begins in the city of New Haven
, heading north through Hartford
to Massachusetts.It generally parallels
Interstate 91. From
Meriden northward through Wethersfield, it runs concurrent with CT
Route 15 and is known locally as The
Berlin Turnpike. Much commerce is located
there resulting in high traffic. The Berlin Turnpike leaves the
roadway south of the Hartford city line.
After an interchange in Hartford with I-91, US Route 5/CT Route 15
travels over the Charter Oak Bridge, which spans the Connecticut
River, into East Hartford. US Route 5 then splits off to head
towards downtown East Hartford. It then has a short overlap with US
Route 44 (US Route 44 has joined it from the west as Connecticut
Boulevard).
US Route 44 continues to the east along
Burnside Avenue as US Route 5 continues northward into South
Windsor
, East Windsor
and Enfield
.It leaves the state soon after a junction
with I-91, heading into Longmeadow, MA (a part of the Springfield
metro area).
Massachusetts
US 5 stays very close the
Connecticut
River.
It enters the state at the town of Longmeadow
on the east bank of the river going up to Springfield
.In Springfield, US 5 then overlaps with
Interstate 91 for about , then separates as its own freeway
crossing the Connecticut River on the South End Bridge into
Agawam
.The freeway portion runs for about up to
West
Springfield
.From the town of Northampton
up to Bernardston
, US 5 overlaps Route 10 (for 26 miles).US 5
goes through the following towns listed below. Access to Interstate
91 is indicated below each town where present. Junctions with major
roadways are also indicated.
- Interstate 91 (concurrent for 0.5 miles) (Exit 1, 3)
- begin freeway section
|
CT |
54.59 |
87.85 |
|
MA |
53.43 |
85.99 |
|
VT |
192.32 |
309.50 |
|
| Total |
300.34 |
483.35 |
- US 20
- end freeway section (3.3 miles)
- Interstate 91 (Exit 13)
- Interstate 90 (Massachusetts Turnpike)
- Interstate 91 (Exit 18, 20)
- Interstate 91 (Exit 21, 22)
- Interstate 91 (Exit 23, 24)
- Deerfield
- Greenfield
- Bernardston
Vermont
US 5 follows the
Connecticut River
Valley from the southern border of Vermont, traveling along the
west bank of that river until it reaches St. Johnsbury.
US 5
enters the state at the town of Guilford
. It passes through the counties of (from
south to north) Windham
, Windsor
, Orange
, Caledonia
, and Orleans
. Near the town of St.
Johnsbury
, US 5 continues northward, following the Passumpsic River valley until it reaches
Sheffield Heights. After crossing the heights, it follows the
Barton River Valley until it reaches
Orleans
. It then turns NNW and crosses the divide
near the Airport Road in Irasburg
and follows the Black
River Valley into Newport
. US 5 ends at the Canadian border in the
village of Derby
Line
, where the roadway continues into Canada as
Quebec Route 143.
As in Connecticut and Massachusetts, US 5 has many interchanges
with Interstate 91, with a total of 22 junctions over its length in
the state. Below is a list of major junctions:
History

Prior to the U.S. Highway system, the
route was designated as
Route 2 of the
New England road marking
system that existed between 1922 and 1927. When US 5 was first
commissioned, it took over the entirety of Route 2. In 1927, US 5
had still not been paved in Vermont. Paving in Vermont was
completed by 1933.
Connecticut
Originally, the route began at the New Haven
Green
in downtown New Haven
(at US 1).
Between
New Haven and North
Haven
, it originally ran east of the Quinnipiac River along modern day
Middletown Avenue (part of Route 17
) and Route
103 (the modern alignment was then designated as US
5A).
In
Hartford
, US 5 also passed by Central
Row in the downtown area, entering the city via Maple Avenue
and exiting on the Bulkeley Bridge
with US 6.
The southern terminus of US 5 has since been realigned several
times. By 1938, US 5 bypassed downtown New Haven via the Prospect
Hill, Dixwell and West River neighborhoods, ending at Davenport
Avenue and Columbus Avenue.
[51618] In the mid 1950s, US 5 was instead
routed through the Mill River neighborhood ending at East Street
and Forbes Avenue.
[51619] The modern New Haven to North Haven
designation was also in place around this time. When I-91 opened in
the 1967, the alignment was truncated to its current terminus at
Exit 5 of
I-91.
Massachusetts
The Massachusetts Highway Commission noted in 1912 that between
Longmeadow and Agawam, the traffic between the Pioneer Valley and
Connecticut was heavier on the east side,
The
western route from Hartford to West
Springfield
, via what is now River Road in Agawam, Massachusetts and Route 159 in Connecticut, was
designated US-5A.
The main
route, US-5 was originally designated to run on the east side of
the river from Hartford and into downtown Springfield
, over the Memorial
Bridge
, along Memorial Avenue, up a four-lane Main Street,
and then to Park Street (and Park Avenue going in the opposite
direction), and up what is now Elm Street, to Riverdale
Street. Riverdale Street at that time followed the northern
part of the current Elm Street, and ended at Witch Path.
In 1938, due to congestion in the West Springfield town center,
Route 5 was moved to a newly constructed bypass from the North End
Bridge to East Elm Street (the current site of McDonald's), where
it continued north along the modern Elm Street and Riverdale
Road.
In 1941-42, a four-lane highway was built from East Elm Street to
the current Elm Street fork just south of Morgan Road. The
designations of both Riverdale Road and Route 5 were moved to the
new more easterly route.
In 1952-53, construction was started on the modern four-lane
highway from the new South End Bridge in Agawam to the existing
bypass at the North End Bridge. Tunnels were built under the
rotaries at the Memorial and North End Bridges so Route 5 traffic
and local traffic would not intersect. In 1971, the Riverdale Road
portion of Route 5 was upgraded to a divided highway, with the
installation of a steel median, and in 1987-88, a new lane was
added to accommodate the new Riverdale Shops at Daggett
Drive.
The 1953 Massachusetts Department of Public Works Master Plan would
have relocated U.S.
5 between Morgan Road in West Springfield
and Mount
Tom
in Holyoke to a right-of-way similar to the current
path of Interstate 91, but this was
never implemented.
Vermont/New Hampshire
US 5 in Vermont mostly followed the New England Route 2 alignment
when it was first designated. Minor deviations from the current
route are found in the urban compacts of White River Junction,
Burke Hollow, Coventry, and Derby Center.
From 1927
to 1929, US 5 was temporarily routed into New Hampshire
along part of what is now New Hampshire Route 12 between North
Walpole and Charlestown. The US 5 designation was removed
when the road opposite the Connecticut River in Vermont had been
improved. In 1931, US 5 in Vermont was taken over by the state,
which began paving the road. Over the years a few minor reroutings
within populated centers have taken place. The current alignment
was in place by 1975.
See also
Bannered routes
References